Thread: post concussion
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Old 04-20-2010, 06:48 PM
Mark in Idaho Mark in Idaho is offline
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Mark in Idaho Mark in Idaho is offline
Legendary
 
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Somewhere near here
Posts: 11,418
15 yr Member
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erica,

It sounds like you found a Cranial Sacral Therapist. Cranial Osteopath is a term used by some osteopaths (D.O.'s) who choose to not go by Cranial Sacral Therapist. Osteopaths take quite a bit of Cranial Sacral Therapy training in osteopath school. I would suggest doing some online research about Cranial Sacral therapy so you have a better understanding of it. It has some very good values but also some very questionable issues.

Getting educated on this controversial therapy will allow you to have better control of your healing. I am not saying to not take advantage of CST but rather to be a knowledgeable health care consumer so you get the best bang for your efforts and health care dollars.

Studies have shown that the same person diagnosed by ten different CST's will get ten different diagnoses. They best skill sets are regarding the spine. They can do amazing things with the spine. If you believe that your skull is comprised of plates that are moveable by the gentle manipulations of a CST, let them try to manipulate your skull. Most physicians and researchers believe that the skull plates fuse during the pre-adolescent years.

I wish I could find the article I read last year. It mentioned that even some D.O.'s who teach in osteopath schools refuse to teach CST because of its unsound basis. One of these D.O. instructors wrote an in-depth review of the fallacies of CST. He acknowledged the value of the spinal manipulation but not the skull manipulation nor the diagnostic techniques of feeling the energy blockages in the skull and such.

A good upper cervical chiropractor is also worth a look. There is such a variation between the many chiropractors and Cranial Sacral Therapists that it is very helpful to understand their therapies. It is also helpful to know that one CST or chiropractor may be helpful where another may be worthless. It is a matter of how they understand and work with your specific body.

For example, I have seen about 15 different chiropractors over the past 30 years. Only 6 were really helpful with my body. Same thing goes for Physical Therapists. They all have strong points. Some have many weak points. Concussion is often a common weak point.

There is a chiropractic diagnostic technique called "Leg Check" that may be helpful. Asking on the phone if the Chiro uses leg check can quickly help you sort them out. Leg check uses comparative leg length to pinpoint muscles spasms in the spine. This is an valuable diagnostic tool in the hands of an expert.

I am surprised the amitriptyline was working as a pain reliever. It is a tri-cyclic anti-depressant that is used in small doses (10 mgs) for Post Concussion Syndrome head aches and other symptoms. Not as a pain reliever but as an alternative way of reducing the head ache by reducing the cause of the head ache (often tension).

I am interested in what you osteopath does to help you. A good set of fingers on the back can be like magic.
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